Part 1: The Trap in Oakhaven Springs

“Mom… I can’t be this man’s wife.”
Audrey said it while lying on the floor, her wedding dress wrinkled, her breathing ragged, and her eyes filled with a terror Clara had never seen in a newly married woman.
Just an hour earlier, the garden of the house in Oakhaven Springs had still smelled of white flowers, almond cake, and expensive tequila. The string lights hanging from the trees looked like low-hanging stars. Their cousins were still laughing in the garage, and the last guests had just left, congratulating the family on “the perfect wedding.”
Clara had waited years for that day.
Julian was her only son, her pride and joy. He had earned a scholarship to study civil engineering, landed a job at a major construction company in Richmond, and had always been serious, hardworking, and respectful.
When he brought Audrey home two years earlier, Clara felt as though God had finally given her the daughter she had never had.
Audrey never tried to impress anyone. She arrived wearing a simple blouse, a shy smile, and willing hands. While the aunts quietly whispered their opinions about her, Audrey rolled up her sleeves and started washing dishes without anyone asking.
From that day on, Clara always saved sweet bread for her whenever she went to the market, made her green mole every Sunday, and found herself calling her “my daughter” without even realizing it.
So when she heard the scream that night, her heart nearly stopped.
It came from the newlyweds’ bedroom.
It wasn’t an ordinary scream of surprise. It was a raw, desperate cry, as if someone had had the air ripped out of their lungs.
Richard, her husband, sat bolt upright in bed. “Did you hear that?”
Clara was already on her feet. “It was Audrey.”
She ran barefoot down the hallway. Her brother-in-law George, who had stayed overnight after the wedding, was already coming up the stairs with a pale face.
“What happened?”
Clara didn’t answer. She pounded on the bedroom door with both fists. “Julian! Audrey! Open the door!”
No one answered. She knocked again, even harder. “Son, open the door!”
There wasn’t a sound on the other side. No footsteps. No crying. No explanation.
Richard gently pushed Clara aside and kicked the door open.
What they found looked nothing like a wedding night.
The bed was untouched. The flower petals scattered across the sheets hadn’t moved. The champagne glasses were still full.
But Audrey was curled up against the wall, clutching her chest and trembling as though she had just escaped something horrifying.
Julian sat on the floor across the room, his shirt unbuttoned, his face soaked with sweat, and his eyes empty.
Clara dropped to her knees beside Audrey. “My dear, what happened? Tell me what happened.”
Audrey shrank away. “Don’t come near me… please…”
“It’s me, Clara. I’m your mother now.”
Audrey looked at her, her lips trembling uncontrollably. “Mom… I can’t be his wife. This man… this man hates me.”
Silence fell over the room like a heavy stone.
Richard turned toward his son. “What did you do to her?”
Julian opened his mouth, but no words came out. Instead, he began to cry. Not like a grown man. Like a little boy trapped inside a lie too big to escape.
“I… I didn’t mean for this to happen,” he finally whispered. “I never thought she’d scream like that.”
Clara felt the blood drain from her face. “What do you mean you didn’t mean to?”
Julian covered his face with both hands. “I just wanted her to be afraid.”